ततो मूर्च्छामनुप्राप्ता दृष्ट्वा पुत्रं तथाविधम् । यष्टिप्रहारनिर्भिन्नं सर्वांगरुधिरोक्षितम्
tato mūrcchāmanuprāptā dṛṣṭvā putraṃ tathāvidham | yaṣṭiprahāranirbhinnaṃ sarvāṃgarudhirokṣitam
Da fiel sie in Ohnmacht, als sie ihren Sohn in solchem Zustand sah—von Stockschlägen durchbohrt und am ganzen Leib von Blut benetzt.
Purāṇic narrator (contextual narrator in Tīrthamāhātmya; exact speaker not explicit in the snippet)
Scene: A mother beholds her son struck by staff-blows, body pierced and drenched in blood; she collapses in a faint, attendants shocked, the scene heavy with pathos.
The verse heightens the ethical warning: cruelty results in profound grief and moral downfall, especially when committed in a sacred tīrtha realm.
The narrative remains within the Nāgatīrtha māhātmya framework, where the sanctity of place contrasts with the horror of adharma.
None directly; the verse is descriptive, preparing the ground for subsequent consequences and possible expiations later in the chapter.